resistor string DAC's are known to utilize lots of area and slow in data conversion due to the large utilization of switches. The problem becomes worse when differential outputs are required in the conversion process. This invention describes a N-bit DAC architecture utilizing a substantially lower number of switches through a unique placement of tap-points in the resistor string and decode logic. differential outputs share the same set of switches through 2 levels of decoding.
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9. A method of generating a differential analog output voltage from a resistor string digital to analog converter comprising the steps of:
providing a switching circuit comprised of a plurality of resistors coupled to one another in series and further including a plurality of switches, each one of said plurality of resistors being coupled to at least a different one of said plurality of switches; generating a voltage to switch said switching circuit and produce an analog output voltage: wherein the plurality of resistors is comprised of an upper, middle and lower section;
the upper and lower section comprises 0.5×(2N-1) resistors in series each of equal values 2R and the middle section comprises 3 resistors in series of equal value of 1 R.
1. A differential resistor string digital to analog converter (R-DAC) architecture for an N-bit digital signal, comprising:
high and low analog reference voltage nodes; two analog output nodes; a resistor string comprised of upper, center and lower sections of predetermined series connected resistors, one end of the resistor string being connected to said high reference voltage node and the other end connected to the low reference voltage node; a first switching network comprising a plurality of 2N-1+2 switches coupled to said resistor string to provide a selectable tap from said resistor string to two separate inner nodes; and a second switching network comprising 4 switches coupled to said two separate inner nodes, for connecting to the output terminals of the D/A converter.
2. The R-DAC of
3. The R-DAC of
4. R-DAC of
5. R-DAC of
6. R-DAC of
7. A R-DAC of
8. A R-DAC of
10. The method of
11. The method of
12. The method of
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The present invention relates to digital to analog converters (DAC's) and more particularly to resistor string type DAC's with differential outputs adopted for IC fabrication.
Digital to analog converters are widely used in mixed-mode systems requiring monotonicity where the converter acts as an interface between the digital signal processing and analog signal processing components of such systems.
Differential DAC's are often seen in high-speed mixed-mode systems to reduce the common-mode voltage noise thereby enhancing the performance of the system.
A typical differential R-DAC is the one shown in
Each resistor tap corresponds to a resistor value of R. It requires 2 jumps of switches (the upper one moving down by one R and the lower one moving up by one R) to achieve 1 LSB(least significant bit) jump for every code transition.
One drawback of this circuit includes high component count: 2N resistors, 2× (2N+1-2) switches which increase area utilization. N is the resolution of the D-to-A converter.
A second drawback is that the voltages selected must propagate through N levels of switches before reaching outputs AOUTP & AOUTN. The delay through the decoding network is a limiting factor on the conversion speed of the DAC.
Another often seen differential R-DAC is shown in
The total number of switches required for this resistor string DAC with differential outputs is 2×(2N)=>(2N+1).
The main drawback of this circuit is that the 2N+1 switches resulting in a large capacitive load at the outputs, as well as large area utilization due to 2N resistors and switches.
Other DAC's have been presented in the literature by:
[1] U.S. Pat. No. 6,297,759 by Lanny L. Lewyn, in which a DAC includes separate converter segments for converting the MSB's and the next NSB's of a digital word. The DAC provides a high conversion rate with very low glitch disturbance.
[2] U.S. Pat. No. 6,130,634 by Mark V. Wadshorth et,al, in which a R-DAC is presented with improved speed by tailoring the selection switch size to the node location.
[3] U.S. Pat. No. 5,495,245 by James J. Ashe, in which the number of resistors and switches required for a voltage scaling DAC is reduced by segmenting the voltage decrementing resistor string into two separate outer strings and an inner string.
[4] U.S. Pat. No. 5,252,975 by Tachio Yuassa et,al,in which DAC having 2 resistor networks:a high-order-bit side and a low-order-bit side which operate in response to high-order bits of a digital input signal and low-order bits thereof.
[5] Analog Integrated Circuit Design by David A. Johns and Ken Martin, showing Nyquist-Rate D/A Converters categorized in 4 main categories: decoder-based,binary-weighted, thermometer-code, and hybrid pp 433-466.
However none achieve low area utilization, due to large reduction of switches and faster conversion speed due to lesser parasitic capacitance in the signal path.
It is an object of one embodiment of the present invention to show a resistor string DAC architecture with differential outputs sharing the same set of switches through 2 levels of decoding.
It is another object of the present invention to show a reduction in the number of switches through a unique placement of tap points in the resistor string and the decoding logic.
These objects are achieved by using two switching networks one with a plurality of 2N-1+2 switches coupled to a first resistor string that provides a selectable tap from the resistor string to two inner nodes, and a second comprised of 4 switches coupled to the two inner nodes for connecting to the output terminals of the D/A converter.
A resistor string of the type shown in
The upper-half consists of 0.5×(2N-1) series connected resistors of equal resistance values 2R, with switched taps from the junctions of successive resistors, the center section-consists of 3 series connected resistors of equal resistance value 1 R, with switched taps from the junctions of successive resistors, and the lower-half consists of 0.5×(2N-1) series connected resistors of equal resistance value 2R,with switched taps from the junctions of successive resistors.
The opposite ends of the "sw" switches from said upper-half resistor string section are all connected together to internal node int_p, the opposite ends of the "sw" switches from said lower-half resistor string section are all connected together to internal node int_n, the opposite end of the "sw" switch from one side of the middle resistor of center section string is connected to internal node int_p, while the opposite end of "sw" switch from second side of the middle resistor of the center section string is connected to internal node_n.
Each switch is controlled by signals derived from a digital logic decoder 50 shown in
Since nodes int_p and int_n are separated, the parasitic capacitance seen by the signal path for the differential outputs is reduced.
At the second level of decoding, only 4 switches are required to share the upper and lower half of the resistor string between output nodes AOUTP and AOUTN.
Signal nodes int_p and int_n are connected to the DAC outputs depending on the logic value of the MSB(most significant bit) D(N-1) and its complement nD(N-1). This unique technique shares the same set of switches (for various tap points) among AOUTP and AOUTN avoiding the need to replicate another set of switches as seen in prior art of FIG. 1 and FIG. 2.
The total number of switches required to control a N-bit DAC is (2N-2)+(2N-2)+2+4= (2N-1)+6.
The voltage across "2R" resistor is equivalent to 1 LSB(least significant bit) value and subsequently the voltage across one "1R" is equivalent to 0.5 LSB value. The resolution of the N-bit DAC using this architecture is 1 part in 2N.
The proposed architecture requires only one jump of switches (either the upper one moving down by "2R", or the lower one moving up by "2R") for each code transition. It is only in the center section of the three resistors of value R each that both "sw" switches will open/close at the same time. This is to facilitate the consistency of the digital decoding logic, as well as to make it "symmetrical". The unique way of tapping resistors combined with the digital logic decoder allows reduction of switch count by about 50%.
The advantage of inherent monotonicity in digital to analog conversion is still guaranteed by the architecture.
Analog outputs being differential also improves the power supply rejection ratio (PSRR) to a certain extent.
Area utilization is smaller due to large reduction of switches as seen in table below:
Proposed | |||||
Prior Art #1 | Prior Art #2 | Architecture | |||
Number of | N | (2N+1 - 2) × 2 | 2 × 2N | 2N-1 + 6 | |
Switches | 8 | 1020 | 512 | 134 | |
Decode logic | not required | N to 2N | N - 1 to 2N-1 | ||
Maximum deviation of the analog output from the ideal value known as integral nonlinearity (INL) as well as the maximum deviation of the analog output step from the ideal value of 1 LSB known as Differential nonlinearity (DNL), gain error and offset error performance are similar to prior art: no degradation due to this unique configuration.
In summary the present invention of R-DAC with differential outputs with its significant reduction in the number of switches, and the two levels of decoding, translate in large savings of silicon area, and faster speed of conversion.
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